Transcript Chapter 10

Chapter 10:
Characters, CStrings, and More
About the string
Class
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
10.1
Character Testing
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Character Testing
• require cctype header file
FUNCTION
MEANING
isalpha
true if arg. is a letter, false otherwise
isalnum
true if arg. is a letter or digit, false otherwise
isdigit
true if arg. is a digit 0-9, false otherwise
islower
true if arg. is lowercase letter, false otherwise
isprint
true if arg. is a printable character, false otherwise
ispunct
true if arg. is a punctuation character, false otherwise
isupper
true if arg. is an uppercase letter, false otherwise
isspace
true if arg. is a whitespace character, false otherwise
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From Program 10-1
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10.2
Character Case Conversion
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Character Case Conversion
• Require cctype header file
• Functions:
toupper: if char argument is lowercase letter, return
uppercase equivalent; otherwise, return input
unchanged
char ch1 = 'H';
char ch2 = 'e';
char ch3 = '!';
cout << toupper(ch1); // displays 'H'
cout << toupper(ch2); // displays 'E'
cout << toupper(ch3); // displays '!'
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Character Case Conversion
• Functions:
tolower: if char argument is uppercase letter, return
lowercase equivalent; otherwise, return input
unchanged
char ch1 = 'H';
char ch2 = 'e';
char ch3 = '!';
cout << tolower(ch1); // displays 'h'
cout << tolower(ch2); // displays 'e'
cout << tolower(ch3); // displays '!'
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10.3
C-Strings
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C-Strings
• C-string: sequence of characters stored in
adjacent memory locations and
terminated by NULL character
• String literal (string constant): sequence of
characters enclosed in double quotes " " :
"Hi there!"
H
i
t
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h
e
r
e
!
\0
C-Strings
• Array of chars can be used to define storage for
string:
const int SIZE = 20;
char city[SIZE];
• Leave room for NULL at end
• Can enter a value using cin or >>
– Input is whitespace-terminated
– No check to see if enough space
• For input containing whitespace, and to control
amount of input, use cin.getline()
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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
10.4
Library Functions for Working with
C-Strings
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Library Functions for Working
with C-Strings
• Require the cstring header file
• Functions take one or more C-strings as
arguments. Can use:
– C-string name
– pointer to C-string
– literal string
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Library Functions for
Working with C-Strings
Functions:
– strlen(str): returns length of C-string str
char city[SIZE] = "Missoula";
cout << strlen(city); // prints 8
– strcat(str1, str2): appends str2 to the
end of str1
char location[SIZE] = "Missoula, ";
char state[3] = "MT";
strcat(location, state);
// location now has "Missoula, MT"
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Library Functions for
Working with C-Strings
Functions:
– strcpy(str1, str2): copies str2 to str1
const int SIZE = 20;
char fname[SIZE] = "Maureen", name[SIZE];
strcpy(name, fname);
Note: strcat and strcpy perform no bounds
checking to determine if there is enough space
in receiving character array to hold the string it
is being assigned.
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C-string Inside a C-string
Function:
– strstr(str1, str2): finds the first
occurrence of str2 in str1. Returns a
pointer to match, or NULL if no match.
char river[] = "Wabash";
char word[] = "aba";
cout << strstr(river, word);
// displays "abash"
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Comparing C-strings
Function:
– strcmp(str1, str2): Takes two CStrings and returns an integer result.
• Result is 0 if both strings are equal on a
character-by-character basis
• Result is Negative if str1 comes before str2
• Result is Positive if str1 comes after str2
– Comparisons are case-sensitive
if (strcmp(firstString, secondString) == 0)
if (!strcmp(firstString, secondString))
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Comparing C-strings (cont’d)
• The following statements do the same thing:
if (strcmp(firstString, secondString) == 0)
if (!strcmp(firstString, secondString))
• Use to sort strings (see Program 10-9):
cout << “Here are the names sorted
alphabetically:\n”;
if (strcmp(name1, name2) < 0)
cout << name1 << endl << name2 << endl;
if (strcmp(name1, name2) > 0)
cout << name2 << endl << name1 << endl;
else cout << “You entered the same name
twice!\n”;
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10.5
C-String/Numeric Conversion
Functions
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String/Numeric Conversion
Functions
• require cstdlib header file
FUNCTION
PARAMETER
ACTION
atoi
C-string
converts C-string to an int value, returns
the value
atol
C-string
converts C-string to a long value, returns
the value
atof
C-string
converts C-string to a double value,
returns the value
itoa
int,C-string,
int
converts 1st int parameter to a C-string,
stores it in 2nd parameter. 3rd parameter is
base of converted value
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String/Numeric Conversion
Functions
int iNum;
long lNum;
double dNum;
char intChar[10];
iNum = atoi("1234"); // puts 1234 in iNum
lNum = atol("5678"); // puts 5678 in lNum
dNum = atof("35.7"); // puts 35.7 in dNum
itoa(iNum, intChar, 8); // puts the string
// "2322" (base 8 for 123410) in intChar
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String/Numeric Conversion
Functions - Notes
• if C-string contains non-digits, results are
undefined
– function may return result up to non-digit
– function may return 0
• itoa does no bounds checking – make
sure there is enough space to store the
result
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10.6
Writing Your Own C-String
Handling Functions
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Writing Your Own C-String
Handling Functions
• Designing C-String Handling Functions
– can pass arrays or pointers to char arrays
– Can perform bounds checking to ensure
enough space for results
– Can anticipate unexpected user input
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From Program 10-9
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From Program 10-10
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10.7
More About the C++ string
Class
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The C++ string Class
• Special data type supports working with strings
• #include <string>
• Can define string variables in programs:
string firstName, lastName;
• Can receive values with assignment operator:
firstName = "George";
lastName = "Washington";
• Can be displayed via cout
cout << firstName << " " << lastName;
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Input into a string Object
• Use cin >> to read an item into a string:
string firstName;
cout << "Enter your first name: ";
cin >> firstName;
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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Input into a string Object
• Use getline function to put a line of
input, possibly including spaces, into a
string:
string address;
cout << "Enter your address: ";
getline(cin,address);
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string Comparison
• Can use relational operators directly to compare string
objects:
string str1 = "George",
str2 = "Georgia";
if (str1 < str2)
cout << str1 << " is less than "
<< str2;
• Comparison is performed similar to strcmp function.
Result is true or false
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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Other Definitions of C++
strings
Definition
Meaning
string name;
defines an empty string object
string myname("Chris");
defines a string and initializes it
string yourname(myname);
defines a string and initializes it
string aname(myname, 3);
defines a string and initializes it with first 3
characters of myname
string verb(myname,3,2);
defines a string and initializes it with 2
characters from myname starting at position
3
string noname('A', 5);
defines string and initializes it to 5 'A's
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string Operators
OPERATOR
MEANING
>>
<<
extracts characters from stream up to whitespace, insert
into string
inserts string into stream
=
assigns string on right to string object on left
+=
appends string on right to end of contents on left
+
concatenates two strings
[]
references character in string using array notation
>, >=, <,
<=, ==, !=
relational operators for string comparison. Return true or
false
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string Operators
string word1, phrase;
string word2 = " Dog";
cin >> word1; // user enters "Hot Tamale"
// word1 has "Hot"
phrase = word1 + word2; // phrase has
// "Hot Dog"
phrase += " on a bun";
for (int i = 0; i < 16; i++)
cout << phrase[i]; // displays
// "Hot Dog on a bun"
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string Member Functions
• Are behind many overloaded operators
• Categories:
– assignment: assign, copy, data
– modification: append, clear, erase, insert,
replace, swap
– space management: capacity, empty,
length, resize, size
– substrings: find, substr
– comparison: compare
• See Table 10-7 for a list of functions
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string Member Functions
string word1, word2, phrase;
cin >> word1;
// word1 is "Hot"
word2.assign(" Dog");
phrase.append(word1);
phrase.append(word2); // phrase has "Hot Dog"
phrase.append(" with mustard relish", 13);
// phrase has "Hot Dog with mustard"
phrase.insert(8, "on a bun ");
cout << phrase << endl; // displays
// "Hot Dog on a bun with mustard"
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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.